Name: Anne-Marie Huby
Company: JustGiving
Based: London
JustGiving founder Anne-Marie Huby says she knew early on that the internet would be a game changer for fundraising.
โIt was clear to me and co-founder Zarine [Kharas] that the internet would change everything,โ says Huby.
It was 2001 and Huby believed the new digital opportunities arising in various commercial sectors had the same potential in the fundraising and giving space.
โI couldnโt believe there wasnโt a [fundraising] platform already available,โ says the Belgium native.
โBut when youโre desperate and you need something that doesnโt exist, thereโs only one thing to do โ do it yourselves.โ
โAs any entrepreneur will tell you, the trick at the very beginning of a business is picking the first minimum viable product. For us, it was the fundraising page.โ
She says the siteโs fundraising page solved a major pain point for charities โ it did the asking for them, removing the awkward task of begging potential donors for cash.
โOur vision was, letโs put this online and give it to everyone โ no matter who they are โ letโs give everyone who has the urge to do something good the opportunity to do so,โ says Huby, who before launching JustGiving co-founded the UK arm of medical aid group Medecins Sans Frontieres/Doctors Without Borders.
Despite such a clear vision, Huby admits launching the venture with a single desk, a telephone and some very modest funding was โterrifyingโ.
โThe early days are terrifying, you put all of your professional capital in to one basket, but you know the stats, a very small percentage of startups actually succeed. But the upside of the night terrors is that youโre determined to make it work.โ
And make it work they did, with JustGiving since raising more than $3 billion for thousands of good causes and now driving more than 14 million visits to the platform each month.
Huby sits down with SmartCompany to talk about partnering with Facebook, the reason you wonโt see her running a marathon for charity anytime soon and why sheโs in the giving game for the long term.
Mornings
โI would lie if I said I was a morning person,โ laughs Huby.
However, on the morning of her chat with SmartCompany, Huby had more than her usual slice of toast before running out the door to work.
โI had breakfast with a number of charities we are working with in Australiaโฆ so I was well fed today.โ
Hugely passionate about her work, Huby seems to relish the chance to sit down and talk strategy with JustGivingโs partners โ of which she counts social media giant Facebook.
โFacebook looms the largest [social network]. One third of our users sign in with Facebook now, so that shows the depth of trust,โ she says.
Trained as a journalist in Belgium, where she presented a daily current affairs show on national radio, Huby is keenly aware of the power of social media in the giving space.
โThe fact that peopleโs options, attitudes and even behaviours are shaped by their social network, to an extend that was unthinkable even two years ago. Itโs profoundly changing the way people make purchasing decisions, consumption decisions and giving decisions.โ
Huby is also passionate about working with small businesses, saying she was thrilled to award JustGivingโs inaugural corporate fundraiser of the year award to a small Hong Kong-based real estate business, IP Global.
โThatโs a great example of the level playing field [of corporate fundraising]. People always expect large corporates to be in there, but it shows what smaller companies can do.โ
Daily life
Huby says she canโt start the day without looking at the numbers โ which includes financials, market data and different qualitative and quantitative research.
From there her work day is as varied as working with JustGivingโs partners on creative campaign ideas to joining in on the โpassionateโ strategy meetings held with JustGivingโs 150-strong staff.
โThereโs always a fascinating debate,โ says Huby.
Huby says it is important for business owners to learn when and how to hand over certain parts of their business to the talented people they hire.
โBusiness founders that donโt thrive long term are those who cling on to certain things,โ she says.
โA business is like an organism; itโs always growing and changing.โ
She says business owners need to foresee where their insights and technological know-how comes to an end and need to broaden their teamโs talent accordingly.
โDifferent stages of a business require different things. There are things I couldnโt even begin to address now. I used to when we were a simpler creature, but weโre now a more evolved creature.โ
Leisure time
For Huby, the work-life paradigm is โsometimes balanced and other times notโ.
โIf you set up a business you need a long-term view. Itโs such a clichรฉ but it is marathon, not 100m sprint, so you need to pace yourself and look after yourselfโฆ It is such an emotional investment.โ
When she does have down time, youโll find Huby cooking โ preferably with a glass of wine in hand โ or curled up with a good book or simply spending time with family and friends.
โUnlike so many of my users, I am not an athlete,โ she says, pointing out her colleagues will tell you she is the last person youโll find climbing Mt Everest or swimming the English Channel for charity.
The future
Although sheโs sitting on a global giving empire, Huby might sound like any other small business entrepreneur when discussing the future.
She says JustGiving is simply trying to create a proposition thatโs compelling and unique, especially given the evolution โ or revolution as she calls it โ of social media.
โThatโs the dimension thatโs both most exciting in business and will undoubtedly open up even more opportunities for the right investment to be made, but also really challenging because the pace of technology and consumer behavioural change is so sustained and fast that it makes it a bit of a roller-coaster.โ
And you wonโt see Huby exiting JustGiving in the near future.
โFor us, itโs a long-term commitment, weโre super excited about the recent changes that weโve hadโฆ Itโs an exciting time.โ
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